Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for producing an amino acid, especially
for a method for producing L-homoserine, L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-valine, or L-threonine
using a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia.
Background Art
[0002] The present inventors obtained, with respect to
E. coli K-12, a mutant having mutation,
thrR, (herein referred to as
rhtA23) that is concerned in high concentrations of threonine (>40 mg/ml) or homoserine
(>5 mg/ml) in a minimal medium (Astaurova, O. B. et al., Appl. Bioch. and Microbiol.,
21, 611-616 (1985)). On the basis of
rhtA23 mutation an improved threonine-producing strain (SU patent No. 974817), homoserine-
and glutamic acid-producing strains (Astaurova et al., Appl. Boch. And Microbiol.,
27, 556-561 (1991)) were obtained.
[0003] Furthermore, the present inventors have revealed that the
rhtA gene exists at 18 min on
E. coli chromosome and that the
rhtA gene is identical to ORF1 between
pexB and
ompX genes. The unit expressing a protein encoded by the ORF1 has been designated as
rhtA (rht: resistance to homoserine and threonine) gene. The
rhtA gene includes a 5'-noncoding region including SD sequence, ORF1 and a terminator.
Also, the present inventors have found that a wild type rhtA gene participates in
resistance to threonine and homoserine if cloned in a multicopy state and that enhancement
of expression of the
rhtA gene improves amino acid productivity of a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia having an ability to produce L-lysine, L-valine or L-threonine (ABSTRACTS of 17th
International Congress of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in conjugation with 1997
Annual Meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, San
Francisco, California August 24-29, 1997, abstract No. 457).
[0004] It was found that at least two different genes which impart homoserine resistance
in a multicopy state exist in
E. coli during cloning of the
rhtA gene. One of the genes is the
rhtA gene, however the other gene has not yet been elucidated.
Disclosure of the Invention
[0005] An object of the present invention is to provide a novel gene participating in resistance
to homoserine, and a method for producing an amino acid, especially, L-homoserine,
L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-valine and L-threonine with a high yield.
[0006] The inventors have found that a region at 86 min on
E. coli chromosome, when cloned by a multicopy vector, impart resistance to L-homoserine
to cells of
E. coli, and the amplification of this region results, like the
rhtA gene, in an improvement of the amino acid productivity of
E. coli. On the basis of these findings, the present invention has been completed.
[0007] Thus, the present invention provides:
(1) a protein comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID No. 2 of the Sequence
Listing or including deletion, substitution, insertion and/or addition of one or more
amino acids in said sequence and having the activity of making a bacterium resistant
to L-homoserine,
(2) the DNA coding for a protein according to (1), which is a DNA defined in the following
(a) or (b):
(a) a DNA which comprises a nucleotide sequence corresponding to the nucleotide numbers
of 557 to 1171 of the nucleotide sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 in Sequence Listing;
or
(b) a DNA which hybridizes with the nucleotide sequence corresponding to the nucleotide
numbers of 557 to 1171 of the nucleotide sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 in Sequence
Listing under stringent conditions, and which codes for the protein having the activity
of making the bacterium resistant to L-homoserine,
(3) a bacterium belonging to the genus Escherichia, wherein L-homoserine resistance of the bacterium is enhanced by amplifying the copy
number or increasing the expression rate of the DNA of (2) in a cell of the bacterium,
(4) the bacterium of (3), wherein the DNA of (1) is carried on a multicopy vector
in the cell of the bacterium,
(5) the bacterium of (3), wherein the DNA of (2) is carried on a transposon in the
cell of the bacterium,
(6) a method for producing an amino acid, comprising the steps of cultivating the
bacterium of any of (3) to (5), which has an ability to produce the amino acid, in
a culture medium to produce and accumulate the amino acid in the medium, and recovering
the amino acid from the medium, and
(7) the method of (6), wherein the amino acid is at least one selected from the group
consisting of L-homoserine, L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-valine and L-threonine.
[0008] The DNA of the present invention may be referred to as "
rhtB gene", a protein coded by the
rhtB gene may be referred to as "RhtB protein", an activity of the RhtB protein which
participates in resistance to L-homoserine of a bacterium (i.e. an activity of making
a bacterium having the RhtB protein L-homoserine-resistant) may be referred to as
"Rh activity", and a structural gene encoding the RhtB protein in the
rhtB gene may be referred to as "
rhtB structural gene". The term "enhancing the Rh activity" means imparting resistance
to homoserine to a bacterium or enhance the resistance by means of increasing the
number of molecules of the RhtB protein, increasing a specific activity of the RhtB
protein, or desensitizing negative regulation against the expression or the activity
of the RhtB protein or the like. The terms "DNA coding for a protein" mean a DNA of
which one of strands codes for the protein when the DNA is double-stranded. The L-homoserine
resistance means a property that a bacterium grows on a minimal medium containing
L-homoserine at a concentration at which a wild type strain thereof can not grow,
usually at 10 mg/ml. The ability to produce an amino acid means a property that a
bacterium produces and accumulates the amino acid in a medium in a larger amount than
a wild type strain thereof.
[0009] According to the present invention, resistance to homoserine of a high concentration
can be imparted to a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia. The cultivation of a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia, which has increased resistance to homoserine and an ability to accumulate an amino
acid, especially, L-homoserine, L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-valine or L-threonine in
a medium results in a high yield of the desired amino acid.
[0010] The present invention will be explained in detail below.
〈1〉 DNA of the present invention
[0011] The DNA of the present invention coding for a protein having the Rh activity and
having an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 in Sequence Listing. Specifically,
the DNA of the present invention may be exemplified by a DNA comprising a nucleotide
sequence of the nucleotide numbers 557 to 1171 of a nucleotide sequence shown in SEQ
ID NO: 1 in Sequence Listing.
[0012] The DNA of the present invention includes a DNA fragment encoding the RhtB protein
conferring on the bacterium
Escherichia coli resistance to homoserine, which includes the regulatory elements of the
rhtB gene and the structural part of
rhtB gene, having the nucleotide sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1.
[0013] The nucleotide sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 corresponds to a part of sequence complement
to the sequence of GenBank accession number M87049. SEQ ID NO: 1 includes f138 (nucleotide
numbers 61959-61543 of GenBank accession number M87049) which is a known but function-unknown
ORF (open reading frame) present at 86 min on
E. coli chromosome, and 5'-flanking and 3'-flanking regions thereof. The f138, which has
only 160 nucleotides in the 5'-flanking region, can not impart the resistance to homoserine.
No termination codon is present between the 62160 and 61959 of M87049 (upstream the
ORF f138). Hence, the coding region is 201 bp longer. Thus the RhtB protein and the
rhtB gene coding for the protein are novel.
[0014] The
rhtB gene may be obtained, for example, by infecting Mucts lysogenic strain of
E. coli using a lysate of a lysogenic strain of
E. coli such as K12 or W3110 according to the method in which mini-Mu d5005 phagemid is used
(Groisman, E. A., et al., J. Bacteriol., 168, 357-364 (1986)), and isolating plasmid
DNAs from colonies growing on a minimal medium containing kanamycin (40 µg/ml) and
L-homoserine (10 mg/ml). As illustrated in the Example described below, the
rhtB gene was mapped at 86 min on the chromosome of
E. coli. Therefore, the DNA fragment including the
rhtB gene may be obtained from the chromosome of
E. coli by colony hybridization or PCR (polymerase chain reaction, refer to White, T.J. et
al, Trends Genet. 5, 185(1989)) using oligonucleotide(s) which has a sequence corresponding
to the region hear the portion of 86 min on the chromosome of
E. coli. Alternatively, the oligonucleotide may be designed according to the nucleotide sequence
shown in SEQ ID NO: 1. By using oligonucleotides having nucleotide sequences corresponding
to a upstream region from the nucleotide number 557 and a downstream region from the
nucleotide number 1171 in SEQ ID NO: 1 as the primers for PCR, the entire coding region
can be amplified.
[0015] Synthesis of the oligonucleotides can be performed by an ordinary method such as
a phosphoamidite method (see Tetrahedron Letters, 22, 1859 (1981)) by using a commercially
available DNA synthesizer (for example, DNA Synthesizer Model 380B produced by Applied
Biosystems). Further, the PCR can be performed by using a commercially available PCR
apparatus (for example, DNA Thermal Cycler Model PJ2000 produced by Takara Shuzo Co.,
Ltd.), using
Taq DNA polymerase (supplied by Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd.) in accordance with a method designated
by the supplier.
[0016] The DNA coding for the RhtB protein of the present invention may code for RhtB protein
including deletion, substitution, insertion, or addition of one or several amino acids
at one or a plurality of positions, provided that the Rh activity of RhtB protein
encoded thereby is not deteriorated. The DNA, which codes for the substantially same
protein as the RhtB protein as described above, may be obtained, for example, by modifying
the nucleotide sequence, for example, by means of the site-directed mutagenesis method
so that one or more amino acid residues at a specified site involve deletion, substitution,
insertion or addition. DNA modified as described above may be obtained by the conventionally
known mutation treatment. The mutation treatment includes a method for treating a
DNA coding for the RhtB protein
in vitro, for example, with hydroxylamine, and a method for treating a microorganism, for
example, a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia harboring a DNA coding for the RhtB protein with ultraviolet irradiation or a mutating
agent such as N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (NTG) and nitrous acid usually
used for the mutation treatment.
[0017] The DNA, which codes for substantially the same protein as the RhtB protein, can
be obtained by expressing a DNA subjected to in vitro mutation treatment as described
above in multicopy in an appropriate cell, investigating the resistance to homoserine,
and selecting the DNA which increases the resistance. Also, it is generally known
that an amino acid sequence of a protein and a nucleotide sequence coding for it may
be slightly different between species, strains, mutants or variants, and therefore
the DNA, which codes for substantially the same protein, can be obtained from L-homoserine-resistant
species, strains, mutants and variants belonging to the genus
Escherichia. Specifically, the DNA, which codes for substantially the same protein as the RhtB
protein, can be obtained by isolating a DNA which hybridizes with DNA having, for
example, a nucleotide sequence of the nucleotide numbers 557 to 1171 of the nucleotide
sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 in Sequence Listing under stringent conditions, and
which codes for a protein having the Rh activity, from a bacterium belonging to the
genus
Escherichia which is subjected to mutation treatment, or a spontaneous mutant or a variant of
a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia. The term "stringent conditions" referred to herein is a condition under which so-called
specific hybrid is formed, and non-specific hybrid is not formed. It is difficult
to clearly express this condition by using any numerical value. However, for example,
the stringent conditions include a condition under which DNAs having high homology,
for example, DNAs having homology of not less than 70% with each other are hybridized,
and DNAs having homology lower than the above with each other are not hybridized.
〈2〉 Bacterium belonging to the genus Escherichia of the present invention
[0018] The bacterium belonging the genus
Escherichia of the present invention is a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia of which the Rh activity is enhanced. A bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia is exemplified by
Escherichia coli. The Rh activity can be enhanced by, for example, amplification of the copy number
of the
rhtB structural gene in a cell, or transformation of a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia with a recombinant DNA in which a DNA fragment including the
rhtB structural gene encoding the RhtB protein is ligated with a promoter sequence which
functions efficiently in a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia. The Rh activity can be also enhanced by substitution of the promoter sequence of
the
rhtB gene on a chromosome with a promoter sequence which functions efficiently in a bacterium
belonging to the genus
Escherichia.
[0019] The amplification of the copy number of the
rhtB structural gene in a cell can be performed by introduction of a multicopy vector
which carries the
rhtB structural gene into a cell of a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia. Specifically, the copy number can be increased by introduction of a plasmid, a phage
or a transposon (Berg, D.E. and Berg, C. M., Bio/Technol., 1, 417 (1983)) which carries
the
rhtB structural gene into a cell of a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia.
[0020] The multicopy vector is exemplified by plasmid vectors such as pBR322, pMW118, pUC19
or the like, and phage vectors such as λ1059, λBF101, M13mp9 or the like. The transposon
is exemplified by Mu, Tn10, Tn5 or the like.
[0021] The introduction of a DNA into a bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia can be performed, for example, by a method of D. M. Morrison (Methods in Enzymology
68, 326 (1979)) or a method in which recipient bacterial cells are treated with calcium
chloride to increase permeability of DNA (Mandel, M. and Higa, A., J. Mol. Biol.,
53, 159 (1970)) and the like.
[0022] If the Rh activity is enhanced in an amino acid-producing bacterium belonging to
the genus
Escherichia as described above, a produced amount of the amino acid can be increased. As the
bacterium belonging to the genus
Escherichia in which the Rh activity is to be enhanced, strains which have abilities to produce
desired amino acids are used. Besides, the ability to produce an amino acid may be
imparted to a bacterium in which the Rh activity is enhanced. Examples of amino acid-producing
bacteria belonging to the genus
Escherichia are described below.
(1) L-threonine-producing bacteria
[0023] The L-threonine-producing bacteria belonging to the genus
Escherichia may be exemplified by strain MG442 (Guayatiner et al., Genetika (in Russian), 14,
947-956 (1978)).
(2) L-homoserine-producing bacteria
[0024] The L-homoserine-producing bacteria belonging to the genus
Escherichia may be exemplified by strain NZ10 (
thrB). This strain was derived from the known strain C600 (
thrB, leuB) (Appleyard R.K., Genetics, 39, 440-452 (1954)) as Leu
+ revertant.
[0025] On the basis of the
rhtB DNA fragment, new amino acid-producing strains
E. coli NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB;
E.
coli MG422/pVIC40,pRhtB; and
E. coli MG442/pRhtB were obtained which are used for the production of amino acids by fermentation.
[0026] The new strains have been deposited (according to international deposition based
on Budapest Treaty) in the Russian National Collection of Industrial Microorganisms
(VKPM) on October 6, 1998. The strain
E. coli NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB has been deposited as an accession number of VKPM B-7658; the strain
E. coli MG442/pRhtB has been deposited as an accession number of VKPM B-7659; and the strain
E. coli MG442/pVIC40,pRhtB has been deposited as an accession number of VKPM B-7660.
[0027] The strain
E. coli NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB (VKPM B-7658) exhibits the following cultural-morphological and biochemical
features.
Cytomorphology. Gram-negative weakly-motile rods having rounded ends. Longitudinal
size, 1.5 to 2 µm.
Cultural features:
[0028]
Beef-extract agar. After 24-hour growth at 37°C, produces round whitish semitransparent
colonies 1.5 to 3 mm in diameter, featuring a smooth surface, regular or slightly
wavy edges, the center is slightly raised, homogeneous structure, pastelike consistency,
readily emulsifiable.
Luria's agar. After a 24-hour growth at 37°C, develops whitish semitranslucent colonies
1.5 to 2.5 mm in diameter having a smooth surface, homogeneous structure, pastelike
consistency, readily emulsifiable.
Minimal agar-doped medium M9. After 40 to 48 hours of growth at 37°C, forms colonies
0.5 to 1.5 mm in diameter, which are colored greyish-white, semitransparent, slightly
convex, with a lustrous surface.
Growth in a beef-extract broth. After 24-hour growth at 37°C, exhibits strong uniform
cloudiness, has a characteristic odor.
Physiological and biochemical features:
[0029]
Grows upon thrust inoculation in a beef-extract agar.
Exhibits good growth throughout the inoculated area.
The microorganism proves to be a facultative anaerobe.
It does not liquefy gelatin.
Features a good growth on milk, accompanied by milk coagulation.
Does not produce indole.
Temperature conditions. Grows on beef-extract broth at 20-42°C, an optimum temperature
lying within 33-37°C.
pH value of culture medium. Grows on liquid media having the pH value from 6 to 8,
an optimum value being 7.2.
Carbon sources. Exhibits good growth on glucose, fructose, lactose, mannose, galactose,
xylose, glycerol, and mannitol to produce an acid and gas.
Nitrogen sources. Assimilates nitrogen in the form of ammonium, nitric acid salts,
as well as from some organic compounds.
Resistant to ampicillin, kanamycin and L-homoserine.
L-Threonine is used as a growth factor.
Content of plasmids. The cells contain multicopy hybrid plasmid pAL4 ensuring resistance
to ampicillin and carrying the gene thrA of the threonine operon, which codes for aspartate kinase-homoserine dehydrogenase
I responsible for the increased homoserine biosynthesis. Besides, the cells contain
a multicopy hybrid plasmid pRhtB ensuring resistance to kanamycin and carrying the
rhtB gene which confers resistance to homoserine (10 mg/l).
[0030] The strain
E. coli MG442/pRhtB (VKPM B-7659) has the same cultural-morphological and biochemical features
as the strain NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB except for L-isoleucine is used as a growth factor instead
of L-threonine. However, the strain can grow slowly without isoleucine. Besides, the
cells of the strain contain only one multicopy hybrid plasmid pRhtB ensuring resistance
to kanamycin and carrying the
rhtB gene which confers resistance to homoserine (10 mg/l).
[0031] The strain
E. coli MG442/pVIC40,pRhtB (VKPM B-7660) has the same cultural-morphological and biochemical
features as the strain NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB except for L-isoleucine is used as a growth
factor instead of L-threonine. However, the strain can grow slowly without isoleucine.
The cells of the strain contain multicopy hybrid plasmid pVIC40 ensuring resistance
to streptomycin and carrying the genes of the threonine operon. Besides, they contain
multicopy hybrid plasmid pRhtB ensuring resistance to kanamycin and carrying the
rhtB gene which confers resistance to homoserine (10 mg/l).
〈3〉 Method for producing an amino acid
[0032] An amino acid can be efficiently produced by cultivating the bacterium in which the
Rh activity is enhanced by amplifying a copy number of the
rhtB gene as described above, and which has an ability to produce the amino acid, in a
culture medium, producing and accumulating the amino acid in the medium, and recovering
the amino acid from the medium. The amino acid is exemplified preferably by L-homoserine,
L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-valine and L-threonine.
[0033] In the method of present invention, the cultivation of the bacterium belonging to
the genus
Escherichia, the collection and purification of amino acid from the liquid medium may be performed
in a manner similar to those of the conventional method for producing an amino acid
by fermentation using a bacterium. A medium used in cultivation may be either a synthetic
medium or a natural medium, so long as the medium includes a carbon and a nitrogen
source and minerals and, if necessary, nutrients which the bacterium used requires
for growth in appropriate amounts. The carbon source may include various carbohydrates
such as glucose and sucrose, and various organic acids. Depending on assimilatory
ability of the used bacterium, alcohol including ethanol and glycerol may be used.
As the nitrogen source, ammonia, various ammonium salts such as ammonium sulfate,
other nitrogen compounds such as amines, a natural nitrogen source such as peptone,
soybean hydrolyte and digested fermentative microbe are used. As minerals, monopotassium
phosphate, magnesium sulfate, sodium chloride, ferrous sulfate, manganese sulfate,
calcium carbonate are used.
[0034] The cultivation is preferably culture under an aerobic condition such as a shaking
culture, and an aeration and stirring culture. The temperature of culture is usually
20 to 40°C, preferably 30 to 38°C. The pH of the culture is usually between 5 and
9, preferably between 6.5 and 7.2. The pH of the culture can be adjusted with ammonia,
calcium carbonate, various acids, various bases, and buffers. Usually, a 1 to 3-day
cultivation leads to the accumulation of the target amino acid in the medium.
[0035] Recovering the amino acid can be performed by removing solids such as cells from
the medium by centrifugation or membrane filtration after cultivation, and then collecting
and purifying the target amino acid by ion exchange, concentration and crystalline
fraction methods and the like.
Brief Explanation of Drawing
[0036]
Fig. 1 shows cloning, identification and inactivation of the rhtB gene.
Fig. 2 shows the amino acid sequence of the RhtB protein.
Examples
[0037] The present invention will be more concretely explained below with reference to Examples.
In the Examples, an amino acid is of L-configuration unless otherwise noted.
Example 1: Obtaining of rhtB DNA fragment
(1) Cloning of rhtB gene into mini-Mu phagemid
[0038] The wild-type
rhtB gene was cloned
in vivo using mini-Mu d5005 phagemid (Groisman, E. A., et al., J. Bacteriol., 168, 357-364
(1986)). MuCts62 lysogen of the strain MG442 was used as a donor. Freshly prepared
lysates were used to infect a Mucts lysogenic derivative of a strain VKPM B-513 (Hfr
K10 metB). The cells were plated on M9 glucose minimal medium with methionine (50
µg/ml), kanamycin (40 µg/ml) and homoserine (10 mg/ml). Colonies which appeared after
48 hr were picked and isolated. Plasmid DNA was isolated and used to transform the
strain VKPM B-513 by standard techniques. Transformants were selected on L-broth agar
plates with kanamycin as above. Plasmid DNA was isolated from those which were resistant
to homoserine, and analyzed by restriction mapping of the structure of the inserted
fragments. It appeared that two types of inserts belonging to different chromosome
regions had been cloned from the donor. Thus, at least two different genes that is
in multicopy and imparts resistance to homoserine exist in
E. coli. One of the two type of inserts is the
rhtA gene which has already been reported (ABSTRACTS of 17th International) Congress of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in conjugation with 1997 Annual Meeting of the
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, San Francisco, California
August 24-29, 1997). Among the other of the two types of inserts, a fragment of a
minimum length which imparts the resistance to homoserine is of 0.8 kb (Fig. 1).
(2) Identification of rhtB gene
[0039] The insert fragment was sequenced by the dideoxy chain termination method of Sanger.
Both DNA strands were sequenced in their entirety and all junctions were overlapped.
The sequencing showed that the insert fragment included f138 (nucleotide numbers 61543
to 61959 of GenBank accession number M87049) which was a known but function-unknown
ORF (open reading frame) present at 86 min of
E. coli chromosome and 201 bp of the upstream region thereof (downstream region in the sequence
of M87049). The f138 which had only 160 nucleotides in the 5'-flanking region could
not impart the resistance to homoserine. No termination codon is present upstream
the ORF f138 between 62160 and 61959 nucleotides of M87049. Furthermore, one ATG following
a sequence predicted as a ribosome binding site is present in the sequence. The larger
ORF (nucleotide numbers 62160 to 61546) is designated as
rhtB gene. The RhtB protein deduced from the gene is highly hydrophobic and contains 5
possible transmembrane segments.
Example 2: Production of homoserine-producing strain
[0040] Strain NZ10 of
E. coli was transformed by a plasmid pAL4 which was a pBR322 vector into which the
thrA gene coding for aspartokinase-homoserine dehydrogenase I was inserted, to obtain
the strains NZ10/pAL4. The strain NZ10 is a
leuB+-reverted mutant (
thrB) obtained from the
E. coli strain C600 (
thrB,
leuB) (Appleyard, Genetics, 39, 440-452 (1954)).
[0041] The
rhtB gene was inserted to a plasmid pUK21 which is the known plasmid pUC19 in which a
kanamycin resistance gene substituted for an ampicillin resistance gene (Vieira, J.
and Messing, J., Gene, 100, 189-194 (1991)), to obtain pRhtB.
[0042] The strain NZ10/pAL4 was transformed with pUK21 or pRhtB to obtain strains NZ10/pAL4,pUK21
and NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB.
[0043] The thus obtained transformants were each cultivated at 37°C for 18 hours in a nutrient
broth with 50 mg/l kanamycin and 100 mg/l ampicillin, and 0.3 ml of the obtained culture
was inoculated into 3 ml of a fermentation medium having the following composition
and containing 50 mg/l kanamycin and 100 mg/l ampicillin, in a 20 x 200 mm test tube,
and cultivated at 37°C for 46 hours with a rotary shaker. After the cultivation, an
accumulated amount of homoserine in the medium and an absorbance at 560 nm of the
medium were determined by known methods.
Fermentation medium composition (g/L)
[0044]
Glucose |
80 |
(NH4)2SO4 |
22 |
K2HPO4 |
2 |
NaCl |
0.8 |
MgSO4·7H2O |
0.8 |
FeSO4·7H2O |
0.02 |
MnSO4·5H2O |
0.02 |
Thiamine hydrochloride |
0.0002 |
Yeast Extract |
1.0 |
CaCO3 |
30 |
(CaCO3 was separately sterilized.) |
[0045] The results are shown in Table 1. As shown in Table 1, the strain NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB
accumulated homoserine in a larger amount than the strains NZ10/pAL4 and NZ10/pAL4,pUK21
in which the
rhtB gene was not enhanced.
Table 1
Strain |
OD560 |
Accumulated amount of homoserine (g/L) |
NZ10/pAL4 |
16.4 |
3.1 |
NZ10/pAL4,pUK21 |
14.3 |
3.3 |
NZ10/pAL4,pRhtB |
15.6 |
6.4 |
Example 3: Production of alanine, valine and isoleucine with pRhtB-introduced strain
[0046] E. coli strain MG442 is a known strain (Gusyatiner, et al., 1978, Genetika (in Russian),
14:947-956).
[0047] The strain MG442 was transformed with the plasmids pUK21 and pRhtB to obtain strains
MG442/pUK21 and MG442/pRhtB.
[0048] The thus obtained transformants were each cultivated at 37°C for 18 hours in a nutrient
broth with 50 mg/l kanamycin, and 0.3 ml of the obtained culture was inoculated into
3 ml of the fermentation medium described in Example 3 and containing 50 mg/l kanamycin,
in a 20 x 200 mm test tube, and cultivated at 37°C for 40 hours with a rotary shaker.
After the cultivation, accumulated amounts of alanine, valine and isoleucine in the
medium and an absorbance at 560 nm of the medium were determined by known methods.
[0049] The results are shown in Table 2. As shown in Table 2, the strain MG442/pRhtB accumulated
each of alanine, valine and isoleucine in a larger amount than the strain MG442/pUK21
in which the
rhtB gene was not enhanced.
Table 2
Strain |
OD560 |
Accumulated amount (g/L) |
|
|
Alanine |
Valine |
Isoleucine |
MG442/pUK21 |
13.4 |
0.2 |
0.2 |
0.3 |
MG442/pRhtB |
13.7 |
0.7 |
0.5 |
0.5 |
Example 4: Production of threonine-producing strain
[0050] The strain MG442 (Example 3) was transformed by introducing a known plasmid pVIC40
(U.S. Patent No. 5,175,107 (1992)) by an ordinary transformation method. Transformants
were selected on LB agar plates containing 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin. Thus a novel strain
MG422/pVIC40 was obtained.
[0051] The strain MG442/pVIC40 was transformed with pUK21 or pRhtB to obtain strains MG442/pVIC40,pUK21
and MG442/pVIC40,pRhtB.
[0052] The thus obtained transformants were each cultivated at 37°C for 18 hours in a nutrient
broth with 50 mg/l kanamycin and 100 mg/l streptomycin, and 0.3 ml of the obtained
culture was inoculated into 3 ml of the fermentation medium described in Example 3
and containing 50 mg/l kanamycin and 100 mg/l streptomycin, in a 20 x 200 mm test
tube, and cultivated at 37°C for 46 hours with a rotary shaker. After the cultivation,
an accumulated amount of threonine in the medium and an absorbance at 560 nm of the
medium were determined by known methods.
[0053] The results are shown in Table 3. As shown in Table 3, the strain MG442/pVIC40,pRhtB
accumulated threonine in a larger amount than the strains MG442/pVIC40 and MG442/pVIC40,pUK21
in which the
rhtB gene was not enhanced.
Table 3
Strain |
OD560 |
Accumulated amount of threonine (g/L) |
MG442/pVIC40 |
17 |
13.6 |
MG442/pVIC40,pUK21 |
16.3 |
12.9 |
MG442/pVIC40,pRhtB |
15.2 |
16.3 |
Example 5: Effect of rhtB gene inactivation and amplification on bacterium E. coli resistance to some amino acids and amino acid analogues
[0054] To inactivate the chromosomal
rhtB gene the plasmid pNPZ46 was constructed (Fig. 1) on the basis of pUK21 vector. It
harbors a DNA fragment from 86 min of
E. coli chromosome, with the
rhtB gene and 5'-flanking and 3'-flanking regions thereof. Then the
ClaI-
Eco47III fragment of the pNPZ46 plasmid
rhtB gene was substituted for
AsuII-
BsrBI fragment containing
cat (Cm
R) gene of pACYC184 plasmid (Chang and Cohen, J. Bacteriol., 134, 1141-1156, 1978)
giving the pNPZ47 plasmid (Fig. 1). To introduce the obtained insertionally inactivated
rhtB gene into the chromosome of the
E. coli strain N99 (the streptomycin-resistant derivative of the known strain W3350 (Campbell,
Virology, 14, 22-33, 1961)), the method of Parker and Marinus was used (Parker, B.
and Marinus, M. G., Gene, 73, 531-535, 1988). The substitution of the wild type allele
for the inactivated one was proved by phage P1 transduction and by Southern hybridization
(Southern, E. M., J. Mol. Biol., 98, 503-517, 1975).
[0055] Then the susceptibility of the thus obtained
E. coli strain N99
rhtB::
cat, of the initial strain N99 (
rhtB-) and of its derivative transformed with pRhtB plasmid, N99/pRhtB, to some amino acids
and amino acid analogues was tested. Overnight cultures of the strains grown in M9
minimal medium at 37°C with a rotary shaker (10
9 cfu/ml) were diluted 1:100 and grown for 5 hours under the same conditions. Then
the log phase cultures thus obtained were diluted and about 10
4 of alive cells were applied to well-dried test plates with M9 agar containing doubling
increments of amino acids or analogues. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)
of these compounds were examined after 40-46 h cultivation. The results are shown
in Table 4.
Table 4
Substrate |
MIC (µg/ml) |
|
N99(rhtB+) |
N99/pRhtB |
N99 rhtB::cat |
1. L-homoserine |
250 |
30000 |
125 |
2. L-threonine |
30000 |
50000 |
30000 |
3. L-serine |
5000 |
10000 |
5000 |
4. L-valine |
0.5 |
1 |
0.5 |
5. AHVA |
50 |
2000 |
25 |
6. AEC |
10 |
25 |
10 |
7. 4-aza-DL-leucine |
40 |
100 |
40 |
[0056] It follows from the Table 4 that multiple copies of
rhtB besides homoserine confered upon cells increased resistance to threonine, serine,
valine, α-amino-β-hydroxyvaleric-acid (AHVA), S-(2-aminoethyl)-L-cysteine (AEC), and
4-aza-DL-leucine. The inactivation of the
rhtB gene, on the contrary, increased the cell sensitivity to homoserine and AHVA. These
results in conjunction with the data on homology of the RhtB protein to LysE lysine
efflux transporter of
Corynebacterium glutamicum (Vrljic et al., Mol. Microbiol., 22, 815-826, 1996) indicate the analogues function
for the
rhtB gene product. The presumed efflux transporters, RhtB, has specificity to several
substrates (amino acids), or may show non-specific effects as a result of amplification.


